Hi, sorry for the newbyness but, on windows, how do you specify the include path ? It seems to never find my standard c includes.

Z:\local\pegasusmanager\LIBPEGASUSMANAGER_01_00_00\bins\fpgaconfig\fpgaconfig.c:15,10 - Fatal - 'stdint.h' file not foundDid you configure the include path used by clang properly?See http://github.com/quarnster/SublimeClang for more details on how to configure SublimeClang.

You need to open up the SublimeClang settings and tweak the "options" list by adding "-IC:/wherever/your/include/files/are". A good start would be to search for stdint.h. Please let me know what path it resides in on your Windows installation and I'll add it as a default path.

quarnster wrote:Are you working with huge files or is there any other reason you must use the 64-bit executable of Sublime Text 2?

No i do not work with large files, but I found that x64 version of sublime is faster on my machine than x32 for w/e reason. Do you have any suggestion as to what might be the problem with my x64 libclang ?

No idea what the problem might be, but you could try this simple C++ sample and see if that works to isolate whether it's your libclang.dll or something with the python bindings that's broken. Please do let me know if you figure it out.

quarnster wrote:You need to open up the SublimeClang settings and tweak the "options" list by adding "-IC:/wherever/your/include/files/are". A good start would be to search for stdint.h. Please let me know what path it resides in on your Windows installation and I'll add it as a default path.

Please upgrade the plugin to the latest version just submitted that has a fix for this or move the options to your SublimeClang user settings. "-IC:/MinGW/include" should work just fine and is now added to the default include paths. Please let me know if this fixes the issue or if you're still having problems. Thanks.

This is awesome. Love this. I've gotten a fairly complex C++ project, and most things are now working for me.

One thing that doesn't seem to work for me, is the ctrl-d ctrl-i to jump to the definition. It displays "Don't know where the implementation is!" on the sublime status line. I've peeked at the Python code for the error, but not sure where the problem is or how to debug the python.

I've tried with a simple test: myutil.h and myutil.c that exist in the same directory. I've also made sure that I've got a -I to the same directory that holds myutil.h in the SublimeClang.sublime-settings file. I'm on Mac OS X Lion.